Author |
Topic Search Topic Options
|
Petrovsk Mizinski
Prog Reviewer
Joined: December 24 2007
Location: Ukraine
Status: Offline
Points: 25210
|
Posted: November 08 2008 at 20:54 |
For me, I had an interest in music that was more complex than pop for some number of years now. I first remember listening to Yes quite a lot when my father brought home a copy of Fragile. In 2005, I first heard Dream Theater's SFAM and from then onwards, knew I would want to hear more of progressive rock.
|
|
The Rock
Forum Senior Member
Joined: June 30 2005
Location: Canada
Status: Offline
Points: 746
|
Posted: November 09 2008 at 02:33 |
Prog found me...
|
What's gonna come out of my mouth is gonna come out of my soul."Skip Prokop"
|
|
peskypesky
Forum Senior Member
Joined: September 25 2005
Location: Texas
Status: Offline
Points: 359
|
Posted: November 09 2008 at 12:47 |
Older brother. Back in the mid-70s, he began to turn me on to Yes, Rush, Genesis, Queen, ELP, etc etc.....
|
Prog fan since 1974.
|
|
Valarius
Forum Senior Member
Joined: January 08 2005
Location: Germany
Status: Offline
Points: 1480
|
Posted: November 09 2008 at 13:26 |
Back in 2003, I was looking in a music shop and decided I was gonna check out a new band. I saw Dream Theater and thought I'd check them out because I'd heard about them covering Master of Puppets (Metallica were my favourite band at the time).
I got Images and Words, and at first I thought it was sh*t, but eventually it grew on me and became my favourite album of all time. Dream Theater became my favourite band around that time and I haven't looked back.
However, the first Prog album I bought was The Promised Land by Queensryche. I saw it in a second hand shop for £3 and thought I'd check 'em out coz it "looked like a rock album".
|
|
Jake Kobrin
Prog Reviewer
Joined: September 20 2008
Status: Offline
Points: 1303
|
Posted: November 09 2008 at 15:07 |
I guess it was Tool... I don't really know. I knew about Dream Theater long before Tool but I've never liked them. I got into Opeth shortly after Tool and then I found more and more Prog bands. Tool led me to bands like Isis which led me to post-rock bands like Mono. Opeth led me to Porcupine Tree which led me to other "softer" prog bands and also to extreme prog bands like Negura Bunget and Arcturus. I get a lot of recommendations from friends and also online with stuff like this.
|
|
|
toroddfuglesteg
Forum Senior Member
Retired
Joined: March 04 2008
Location: Retirement Home
Status: Offline
Points: 3658
|
Posted: November 09 2008 at 16:15 |
I was introduced to Prog Rock twenty-five years ago through a neighbor in our holiday home. He was into Saga and Camel. I loved Saga and was mildly interested in Camel. I got to know Rush through Saga (bought the Hold Your Fire cassette) and fell for Rush. Rush is from the same town as Saga, as you all know. After that, I became a record label manager, went bankrupt on that and hated music. I did not listen to music for five years, being unemployed, homeless and bitter for a time. I got tired with the metal scene and the music. I wanted to listen to progressive rock and started to collect prog rock through Prog Archives and other websites on a systematic manner five years ago. I have no regrets.
That's my story.
|
|
Nil Recurring
Forum Newbie
Joined: October 18 2007
Location: Netherlands
Status: Offline
Points: 22
|
Posted: November 09 2008 at 16:58 |
It was when I was having a look at my dad's vinyl collection and came across ITCOTCK and it's fantastic cover art. I listened to it and liked some of the songs. Then I discovered that my dad also had the Red album and I loved it! At that time I was a hard rock/heavy metal fan who played the drums and I was grabbed by the jazzy style of bill bruford's drumming. I asked my drum teacher about it and he gave me names of bands like Rush Genesis and Yes, but never really like them. Then I searched on the internet for King Crimson music and came across this website.. from then on I was swallowed by prog
|
Music is no entertainment.. music is art! thread it that way
|
|
Nerievsky
Forum Newbie
Joined: September 29 2008
Status: Offline
Points: 14
|
Posted: November 09 2008 at 18:43 |
My fathers are progheads, I think my first prog record was The dark side of the moon.
|
|
Peter
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: January 31 2004
Location: Canada
Status: Offline
Points: 9669
|
Posted: November 09 2008 at 18:57 |
We've had this topic about 150 times now....
Older cool sister -- I was a young teen. Early Genesis, Yes, ELP & Tull reeled me in.
|
"And, has thou slain the Jabberwock? Come to my arms, my beamish boy! O frabjous day! Callooh! Callay!' He chortled in his joy.
|
|
progaeopteryx
Prog Reviewer
Joined: June 03 2005
Location: Refrigerator
Status: Offline
Points: 3613
|
Posted: November 09 2008 at 19:10 |
It was either the sound of helicopters on Pink Floyd's On the Run or the day I discovered that a butter knife is perfect for removing watermelon seeds.
|
|
Cakey McButterlumps
Forum Newbie
Joined: October 16 2008
Status: Offline
Points: 3
|
Posted: November 10 2008 at 02:01 |
My "first" introduction to prog came about completely by accident. I was on vacation with a friend in Tennessee. While there, we stopped at this run down mall and inside was a tiny record store. In it was a bunch of bands I had never heard of before (King Crimson, ELP, etc.). After browsing around I finally settled on buying Dream Theater's "Scenes From A Memory" and Blind Guardian's "Tales From the Twilight World." I was immediately blown away.
Of course, I had to find more music like this and at the time I was really into the heavier music. Slowly, through PA and getting to talk to other prog fans I have met along the way, I began listening to the "classics" like Genesis, Zappa, Yes, etc... and loved them even more.
|
|
prog4evr
Forum Senior Member
Joined: September 22 2005
Location: Wuhan, China
Status: Offline
Points: 1455
|
Posted: November 10 2008 at 02:15 |
hawkcwg wrote:
Who really helped you find progressive muic?
Family?
Friend?
Time period?
What Band?
Or Artist?
For me I watched a youtube video of Mike Portnoy of Dream Theater playing |
For me, it was a friend when I told him I thought Kansas Leftoverture was "cool progressive rock" (parts of its are actually quite classic prog). Anyway, he basically said WTF? and gave me his copy of Yes Relayer. I wore out his cassette tape, bought him another copy and myself one. I have to admit: THAT album is quintessential prog - and that basically sent me on my journey in the mid-1970s for any and all prog - up to the present day!
|
|
A Person
Forum Senior Member
Joined: November 10 2008
Location: __
Status: Offline
Points: 65760
|
Posted: November 10 2008 at 02:20 |
My mother introduced me to Pink Floyd With A Collection of Great Dance Songs when i was very young(too young to remember). Unfortunately, I didn't here Pink Floyd again till I was about 14, when I was listening to whatever everyone else was listening too and I had a compulsion to buy the Dark Side of the Moon, which totally blew my mind.
After that for a few years I listened to some Classic Rock, but almost exclusively Pink Floyd. I didn't know it then, but I was selecting mostly Prog bands from what I heard on the radio and the Rhapsody Channels that are available from Rhapsody(I had a year free with my mp3 player), such as Kansas and Rush.
After I grew bored with that, I googled "Prog Rock" and found this website, which I used to as a reference to help build my library of great prog.
|
|
Mandrakeroot
Forum Senior Member
Italian Prog Specialist
Joined: March 01 2006
Location: San Foca, Friûl
Status: Offline
Points: 5851
|
Posted: November 10 2008 at 09:09 |
My mind... Banco Del Mutuo Soccorso... PFM... Deep Purple, Uriah Heep, The Moody Blues, Procol Harum, Queen, Jethro Tull, Rush... And PA!!!
|
|
eon_
Forum Newbie
Joined: December 18 2006
Location: Ecuador
Status: Offline
Points: 28
|
Posted: November 10 2008 at 14:11 |
Well for me it al started back in 2000 when I heard APC's mer de noms which lead me to Tool and then to King Crimson...
|
Spiral out, keep going...
|
|
Jansinnet
Forum Newbie
Joined: October 31 2008
Location: Savannah, Ga
Status: Offline
Points: 1
|
Posted: November 10 2008 at 18:29 |
Google search for rock forums. So here checking around.
First post here.
Jan
|
http://www.bigappleoutlet.com/
|
|
Moogtron III
Prog Reviewer
Joined: April 26 2005
Location: Belgium
Status: Offline
Points: 10616
|
Posted: November 10 2008 at 19:21 |
I have three older brothers
When I was a kid, my oldest brother liked ELP and ELO
My middle brother liked Genesis, Yes, Kayak and Earth & Fire
My youngest brother liked Procol Harum
All of my family, including my parents, liked Focus
That's what they call "prog immersion"
|
|
RoidRageOnStage
Forum Senior Member
Joined: October 27 2008
Status: Offline
Points: 120
|
Posted: November 10 2008 at 20:38 |
Jansinnet wrote:
Google search for rock forums. So here checking around.
First post here.
Jan |
Bravissimo
|
|
spookytooth
Forum Senior Member
Joined: April 06 2008
Location: Atlanta, Ga
Status: Offline
Points: 438
|
Posted: November 10 2008 at 20:42 |
Prog is my life. I'm sure there's something in my DNA code that makes me instinctively love prog.
In all seriousness, though, my parents were HUGE fans of Pink Floyd, Yes, ELP, and Jethro Tull, and listening to those bands at an early age helped me in my later discovery of other amazing prog bands like Genesis and Kansas...
|
Would you like some Bailey's?
|
|
Arachnid1111
Forum Newbie
Joined: November 10 2008
Location: Washington
Status: Offline
Points: 37
|
Posted: November 10 2008 at 20:44 |
To begin my way with progressive rock, i began listening to the Tool album Lateralus. I then got really into bands such as Porcupine Tree and others such as that. I play in a Prog band with the 7-string electric guitar. A certain person who really influences my guitar ability in prog rock would be Adam Jones from Tool. I became very fond of his abilities when i picked up the guitar about 11 years ago and im still playing
|
"Your`e such an inspiration of all the ways i will never choose to be" -APC
|
|
Donate monthly and keep PA fast-loading and ad-free forever.